Lisa is a sales manager at a clothing retail store. She has hired you, a recent graduate with a marketing degree with an emphasis on marketing information systems. She wants you to analyze big data that the company has gathered on its customers to come up with Ideal Customer Profiles so that the firm can make marketing Investment decisions to attract such customers. Lisa explains that an ideal customer profile is a description of the demographics, psychographies, and behavior of the customers who are most likely to purchase their firm's product. In order to identify the ideal Customers, you must determine the Customer Acquisition Costs, Lifetime Value, Payback Periods, and Customer Retention. You are familiar with these concepts because you learned about them in your marketing classes. John Lund Blend Images LLC 1. You know that the Customer Acquisition Cost is the cost associated with convincing a customer to buy a good or service. It includes the product, research, marketing, and accessibility costs. You also know that it equals the marketing expenses per month divided by the number of new customers per month You have determined that two certain groups of customers are the largest groups of buyers. You want to know which group will be more profitable to target in terms of marketing. You check the company's big data and find that the marketing expense per month for targeting the first group is $30,000, while the second group requires $60,000. You estimate that this marketing campaign will be able to attract 1,000 new customers for demographic group 1 and 1,500 for demographic group 2. A Marketing Expenses for Targeting Customers Customer Acquisition Cost B C Number of Customers 2. Prey 1 of 1 Next You have determined that two certain groups of customers are the largest groups of buyers. You want to know which group will be more profitable to target in terms of marketing. You check the company's big data and find that the marketing expense per month for targeting the first group is $30,000, while the second group requires $60,000. You estimate that this marketing campaign will be able to attract 1,000 new customers for demographic group 1 and 1.500 for demographic group 2. A B Marketing Expenses for Number of Customers Customer Acquisition Cost Targeting Customers 1 2 What is the Customer Acquisition Cost for each customer in demographic group 1? $40 O $50 $30 $60 What is the Customer Acquisition Cost for group 2? $40 O $100 $80 $60 2. You are now ready to calculate the Customer Lifetime Value, which Lisa wants calculated as a forecast of the net profit related to the whole purchase future associated with a customer. It equals the monthly sales to a certain customer, multiplied by the gross profit percentage, multiplied by the number of lifetime months a customer is expected to purchase from a certain store. Using company data, you have determined that the gross profit percentage is 25 percent. or 0.25. The monthly sales to an average customer would be $150 for the first group and $210 for the second group B C D Monthly Sales to a Gross Profit Percentage Customer Number of Lifetime Months Customer Lifetime Value 2 1 Over a 240-month period, what is the Customer Lifetime Value for the first group? O $11,000 O $9,000 $10,000 O $12,000 Over the same period, what is the Customer Lifetime Value for the second group? O $18.600 $16,600 $14,600 O $12,600 Prey 1 of 1 Next > 3. After tabulating the first two results, you begin to analyze the third component of ideal customers: the Payback Period. This is the duration of time needed for an investment to retrieve its initial expense in terms of profits or savings. It is calculated by dividing the Customer Acquisition Cost by the product of the monthly sales to a certain customer, multiplied by the gross profit percentage. A B c D Monthly Sales to a Customer Acquisition Cost Customer Gross Profit Percentage Payback Period 2 What is the Payback Period for the first group? O 1.2 months 1 month O 1.4 months O 0.8 months What is the Payback period for the second group? O 0.76 months O 0.96 months 11 months O 1.2 months Prey 1 of 1 !!! Next 4. Which demographic group will consist of the ideal Customers that the store should invest in? O group 2 O group 1 5. After identifying the ideal group of customers, you want to determine the rate of keeping these customers loyal to your store. So, you decide to analyze the Customer Retention Rate, the rate of loyal customers within a business. This rate will help you to both tabulate the firm's customer retention metrics and measure results over time. Using company data, you find that at the beginning of last year, your store had 5,000 customers, and by the end of that year, it had gained 600 customers. In the same year, the company lost 300 customers due to the opening of a new store by a competitor in the vicinity. You used the following formula to calculate the Customer Retention Rate. ((Number of customers at the end of the year - Number of new customers acquired during the same year)/(Number of customers at the beginning of the year)) x 100 A B of Customers at the End of New Customers # of Customers at the of the Year Acquired Beginning of the Year Customer Retention Rate D 2 What did you find? (Please note that you need to calculate the number of customers at the end of the year on your own.) Prom 1 of 1 Next > search Bi 5. After identifying the ideal group of customers, you want to determine the rate of keeping these customers loyal to your store. S you decide to analyze the Customer Retention Rate, the rate of loyal customers within a business. This rate will help you to both tabulate the firm's customer retention metrics and measure results over time. Using company data, you find that at the beginning last year, your store had 5,000 customers, and by the end of that year, it had gained 600 customers. In the same year, the compan lost 300 customers due to the opening of a new store by a competitor in the vicinity. You used the following formula to calculate th Customer Retention Rate. [[Number of customers at the end of the year - Number of new customers acquired during the same year)/(Number of customers at the beginning of the year)) x 100 of Customers at the End of New Customers # of Customers at the Acquired Beginning of the Year B D 1 Customer Retention Rate of the Year 2 What did you find? (Please note that you need to calculate the number of customers at the end of the year on your own.) 94 percent 88 percent 90 percent O 92 percent